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As Syria War Roils, Unrest Among Sects Hits Turkey

A street in Samandag, a predominantly Alawite town not far from the Syrian border. Many Turkish Alawites seem to be solidly behind Syria’s embattled leader, Bashar al-Assad.Credit
Ayman Oghanna for The New York Times

ANTAKYA, Turkey — At 1 a.m. last Sunday, in the farming town of Surgu, about six hours away from here, a mob formed at the Evli family’s door.

The ill will had been brewing for days, ever since the Evli family chased away a drummer who had been trying to rouse people to a predawn Ramadan feast. The Evlis are Alevis, a historically persecuted minority sect of Islam often associated with the minority sect of Syria’s embattled leaders, the Alawites. Many Alevis and Alawites do not follow some Islamic traditions like fasting for Ramadan.

The mob began to hurl insults. Then rocks.

“Death to Alawites!” they shouted. “We’re going to burn you all down!”

Then someone fired a gun.

“They were there to kill us,” said Servet Evli, who was hiding in his bedroom with his pregnant wife and terrified daughter, both so afraid that they urinated through their clothes.

As Syria’s civil war degenerates into a bloody sectarian showdown between the government’s Alawite-dominated troops and the Sunni Muslim majority, tensions are increasing across the border between Turkey’s Alevi and Alawite minorities and the Sunni Muslim majority here.

The Alevis, mostly ethnic Turks estimated at 15 million to 20 million strong and one of the biggest minorities in this country. The Alawites are of Arab ethnicity and closely related to Syria’s Alawites. Their population less than a million is concentrated in the Hatay province bordering northern Syria. Both groups seem to be solidly behind Syria’s embattled strongman, Bashar al-Assad, while Turkey’s government, and many Sunnis, supports the Syrian rebels.

Many Alevis and Alawites in Turkey fear the sectarian violence spilling across the border. Already, the sweltering, teeming refugee camps along the frontier are fast becoming caldrons of anti-Alawite feelings.

Photo

A tapestry for sale in the Turkish town of Harbiye showed an image of a widely supported President Bashar al-Assad.Credit
Ayman Oghanna for The New York Times

“If any come here, we’re going to kill them,” said Mehmed Aziz, 28, a Syrian refugee at a camp in Ceylanpinar, who drew a finger across his throat.

He and his friends are Sunnis, and they all howled in delight at the thought of exacting revenge against Alawites.

Many Alawites and Alevis in Turkey are suspicious of the bigger geopolitics, and foreign policy analysts say they may have a point. The Turkish government is led by an Islamist-rooted party that is slowly but clearly trying to bring more religion, particularly Sunni Islam, into the public sphere, eschewing decades of purposefully secular rule. Alawites here find it deeply unsettling, and a bit hypocritical, that Turkey has teamed up with Saudi Arabia, one of the most repressive countries in the world, and Qatar, a religious monarchy, both Sunni, to bring democracy to Syria.

The minority Islamic sects point to the surge of foreign jihadists streaming into Turkey, en route to fight a holy war on Syria’s battlefields. Many jihadists are fixated on turning Syria, which under the Assad family’s rule has been one of the most secular countries in the Middle East, into a pure Islamist state.

“Do you really believe these guys are going to build a democracy?” asked Refik Eryilmaz, an Alawite member of the Turkish Parliament. “The Americans are making a huge mistake. They’re helping Turkey fight Assad, but they’re creating another Taliban.”

American officials recently disclosed that a small group of C.I.A. agents were working along the Turkey-Syria border with their Turkish counterparts, vetting which rebels receive weapons. American officials have acknowledged concerns about Syria turning into a magnet for jihadists, but they believe that foreign fighters still make up only a small slice of the Syrian resistance.

Ali Carkoglu, a professor of international relations with Koc University in Istanbul, said Turkey’s government was increasingly using sectarian language and trying to play the role of “the Sunni elder brother” in the region. Like Syria, Turkey’s population is predominantly Sunni.

Photo

Turhan Sat, an Alawite, showed a necklace with a mingling of Alawite and Christian iconography.Credit
Ayman Oghanna for The New York Times

The Alevis and Alawites here are worried they could become easy targets. Historically, they have been viewed with suspicion across the Middle East by mainstream Muslims and often scorned as infidels. The Alawite sect was born in the ninth century and braids together religious beliefs, including reincarnation, from different faiths.

Many Alawites do not ever go to a mosque; they tend to worship at home or in Alawite temples that have been denied the same state support in Turkey that Sunni mosques get. Many Alawite women do not veil their faces or even cover their heads. The towns they dominate in eastern Turkey, where young women sport tank tops and tight jeans, feel totally different than religious Sunni towns just a few hours away, where it can be difficult even to find a woman in public.

“We’re more moderate,” explained Turhan Sat, a Turkish Alawite who works at a gas station in Bridgeport, Conn., and was on vacation in Turkey. He was swigging tea the other day in the leafy town square of Samandag, a predominantly Alawite town not far from the Syrian border.

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Not far away in the Alawite-dominated town of Harbiye, there is a new best-selling item that cannot seem to stay on the shelves: cheap tapestries bearing Mr. Assad’s portrait.

“Everybody wants them,” said Selahattin Eroglu, a vendor, who had just sold his last one. “People here love Assad.”

Part of this sentiment may be self-protective. The Syrian rebels hardly conceal a vicious sectarian antipathy. Khaldoun al-Rajab, an officer with the rebel Free Syrian Army, said he witnessed two Alawites in a car take a wrong turn in Homs and end up in a Sunni neighborhood. “Of course they were arrested and killed by rebels,” he said.

Few in Turkey expect such bedlam to break out anytime soon in this country, which is tightly controlled and has escaped violent sectarianism, for the most part.

Photo

“People here love Assad,” a vendor in Harbiye said.Credit
The New York Times

But the threatening mob at the Evli family’s home in Surgu reminded many Alawites and Alevis of the killing of more than 30 Alevis in 1993 who were burned alive by a group of Islamists in the Turkish town of Sivas.

It was only after police officers reassured the mob that the Evli family was moving out of the neighborhood, which was news to the Evlis, that the mob dissipated.

Though the Evlis are also Kurdish, an ethnic minority group in Turkey, which may have contributed to the nasty feelings against them, Songul Canpolat, a director of an Alevi foundation in Turkey, said, “The idea that Turkish Alevis should be eliminated is gaining ground.”

Turkish government officials denied any bias against Alevis or Alawites, saying they had made extra efforts to be “attentive and sensitive” to their fears.

“Of course, we do not claim that all issues are resolved,” said Egemen Bagis, minister for European Union affairs.

A few months ago, Mr. Eryilmaz, the member of Parliament, who belongs to an opposition party, went to see Mr. Assad in Damascus. He said that Mr. Assad was actually quite relaxed and that this whole conflict was really about religion.

“What’s happening inside Syria is the Syrian leg of an international project,” he said, with the Turkish government aligning with Saudi Arabia and Qatar to make this part of the Middle East more religiously “radical.”

Mr. Eryilmaz was sitting in a cafe in Antakya, a border town with a large Alawite population, and digging into a plate of baklava during the bright, sunny hours of the afternoon, when Muslims observing Ramadan usually fast.

“Look at my people,” he smiled, spreading his hands wide and encompassing families eating ice cream and one young couple nuzzling on a couch. “My people are free.”

Correction: August 12, 2012

An article last Sunday about hostility by Turkey’s Sunni Muslim majority toward the country’s Alawite community, an Islamic minority suspected of allegiance to the Alawite-dominated government of neighboring Syria, conflated two distinct minority groups in Turkey, the Alawites and the Alevis. The Alawites, of Arab ethnicity, are closely related to Syria’s Alawites and are concentrated in Hatay province bordering northern Syria. Their population is believed to be less than 1 million. The Alevis, mostly ethnic Turks, total between 15 million and 20 million and are spread throughout Turkey. While both sects are offshoots of Shiite Islam and are sometimes confused as the same, even by some of their own members, it is not the case that Alawites constitute “one of the biggest minorities” in Turkey.

A version of this article appears in print on August 5, 2012, on Page A6 of the New York edition with the headline: As Syria War Roils, Unrest Among Sects Hits Turkey. Order Reprints|Today's Paper|Subscribe